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The Breeder Guidance System By Martin Wahl |
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This is where the world famous "pink pedigrees" come from. A puppy born in
As any breeder knows, breeding success depends on reliable
information. The more information a breeder has on the ancestors of his breed
stock, the more predictable the puppies will be. Max
von Stephanitz understood this, and in 1922 started the Körung,
a system that provides SV members with perfectly impartial breed classification information, published each
year in the SV Körbuch. Today, any member of the SV in
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Before a German Shepherd can be breed surveyed, it must turn two
years within the breed survey year and must meet all
basic SV breed requirements, plus it must have passed an endurance test (AD - running
20 km without tiring). A "breed master" (Körmeister:
an experienced and specially trained SV judge) will asses the dogs breed
worthiness by giving it a very thorough examination. This includes a
temperament test (ongoing throughout the breed survey), a gun test (at least
2 gunshots at a distance of about 15 paces), and a courage test. |
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Conformation and other checks include: height at the withers,
chest depth, chest circumference, weight, pigmentation, coat, color, disposition, alertness, nerves, self confidence,
hardness, courage, fighting instinct, secondary sex characteristics,
constitution, expression, structure, bones, musculature, firmness of back and
ligaments, top line, elbow lay-on, pasterns, legs gait, outreach, rear drive,
toe nails, paws, head, eye color, upper and lower
jaw, and dentition. The initial breed survey is good for two years. At the end of the
two year period, the dog must be breed surveyed again, this time for life.
Failure to breed survey again within the two year period will require a new
initial breed survey good for only two years. |
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The Breed Survey Report (Körbericht)
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At the conclusion of the breed survey, the breed master will
classify the dog in a "Körklasse" (Kkl.) and fill out the breed survey form (Körschein), listing all measurements and findings,
including a brief overall assessment (II.a Gesamturteil) of the dog in a "breed survey
report", plus "special features/faults for breeding" remarks
(V. Besondere Vorzüge/Mängel),
and his "breed advice/recommendations" remarks (VI. Beratung...). |
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The result of the courage test
will be recorded at the end of the "breed survey report" as either
"pronounced" (ausgeprägt) or
"present" (vorhanden) or
"insufficient" (nicht genügend),
and the outing as either "does release" (läßt
ab) or "does not release" (läßt nicht ab).
Owners of disqualified dogs will have their dog’s registration certificate
returned from the SV head office, marked with the reason for
disqualification. Qualifying dogs will have their registration certificate returned
and will receive a copy of the blue "breed survey form" (Körschein) after the SV head office has recorded all the
data for it’s Körbuch. |
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The Breed Survey Book (Körbuch)
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Each year the SV publishes a "breed survey book" (a
1200 page hardcover book) listing all the dogs breed surveyed (Angekört) during the past year (over 5000 in 1995). It
provides breeders with reliable and
impartial information and contains the data of almost
the entire "breed survey form" (Körschein),
which is presented in the same sequence, but without names, data only, e.g. d) Gewicht 37.5
kg, is shown as d) 37.5 kg.
The SV requires
each of its 2200 local clubs (OG) to maintain a complete set of breed survey
books, so that each member in every local club in |
The breed warden
(Zuchtwart)
Every local club (OG) has a breed warden (Zuchtwart),
usually a retired judge or experienced breeder, that is required by the SV to be available to the local membership to
give advice on all matters concerning breeding, so that any SV member with a
German Shepherd female can become a high quality breeder
with his first litter. (You may want to call this "backyard
breeding", I call this a system that’s been recognized world wide as
producing the worlds best German Shepherds. Ask any K-9 officer.) Local breed wardens report to their regional (LG) breed wardens, which
in turn report to the SV head office's main breed warden.
The duties of the local breed warden also include the visiting of
every litter in his district before the puppies are three days old. He must
check and report the dams tattoo to the SV, find a "foster bitch" if
there are more than 8 puppies in the litter before they are 10 days old, make
sure that any white, blue or misformed pups are
culled, check on the bitches condition, living quarters, and whelping area at
least 3 more times, and report the litter information to the SV registry and
any substandard conditions and unregistered litters (wild breeding) to his
regional (LG) breed warden.
Copyright 2001 Martin Wahl, Real GSD. RealGSD1@netscape.net.
All
rights reserved. Please view his site Real GSD.